Kaien Island

Kaien Island dusted in frost
Kaien Island showing Prince Rupert

Kaien Island is a Canadian island on the coast of British Columbia, just north of the mouth of the Skeena River and to the south of the Alaska Panhandle.[1] The island has an area of about 45 square kilometres (11,000 acres), is roughly oval, and about 11 kilometres (6.8 miles) long along its long axis.[2] The island consists of a central mountain ridge, surrounded by coastal lowlands. The dominant central peak is Mount Hays, reaching 708 metres (2,323 ft),[3] with a secondary peak, Mount Olfield, reaching 555 metres (1,821 ft)[4] to the northeast.

Located within the Hecate Depression of the Coastal Trough, Kaien Island is a subdivision of the Coast Mountains geomorphic region.[5] The island's bedrock consists of metasedimentary amphibolite, which dips towards the east at about 35 degrees.[2] The island is contained within the North Coast Regional District and is part of the North Coast region. Tidal waters surrounding the island have a wide range which results in extensive exposure of mud flats and rock shoals that are prime habitat for invertebrates and intertidal fish.[6]

Kaien Island is central to the traditional territories of the Tsimshian First Nations, and has been permanently settled for more than 5,000 years.[6] The city of Prince Rupert is on the island. Casey Point is on the western extremity of the island,[7] facing Digby Island, and was the site of one of the coastal defence installations to protect the BC Coast during World War II. Another such installation was at Seal Cove on the island's northern tip.[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Kaien Island". BC Geographical Names.
  2. ^ a b "Bulk Liquids Terminal, South Kaien Island, Prince Rupert, BC, Volume II Environmental Report" (PDF). Ocean Ecology.
  3. ^ "Mount Hays". BC Geographical Names.
  4. ^ "Mount Olfield". BC Geographical Names.
  5. ^ "Landforms of British Columbia, a Physiographic Outline" (PDF). University of Victoria.
  6. ^ a b "Coast Tsimshian pre-contact Economics and Trade: An Archaeological and Ethno-historic reconstruction" (PDF). University of British Columbia.
  7. ^ "Casey Point". BC Geographical Names.
  8. ^ "Seal Cove". BC Geographical Names.

Images

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54°16′58″N 130°18′12″W / 54.28274°N 130.30341°W / 54.28274; -130.30341